This website is run by the community, for the community... and it needs advertisements in order to keep running. Blocking our ads means your killing our stats!
Please disable your ad-block, or become a premium member to hide all advertisements and this notice.

This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Learn More.

XP Pro Network Install via distribution share

This website is run by the community, for the community... and it needs advertisements in order to keep running. Blocking our ads means your killing our stats!
Please disable your ad-block, or become a premium member to hide all advertisements and this notice.

Hi Folks,

Hoping that someone can help me out with this.

I have an HP desktop running Windows Server 2003. have set up the Active Directory, DNS, DHCP. Domain is good and my other desktop can log onto the domain fine and IP address is allocated.

I have another box (formatted with FAT) and want to install XP via the distribution share. The share has been set up on the Server (C:\I386). I'm booting this box via a network boot disc. Starts up fine but then hangs when trying to acquire an IP address.

This is where I'm now tearing my hair out (not that there is much left!). Any ideas what is going wrong or am I being really thick and missing something really obvious?

This website is run by the community, for the community... and it needs advertisements in order to keep running. Blocking our ads means your killing our stats!
Please disable your ad-block, or become a premium member to hide all advertisements and this notice.

from memory you have to set up and authorise a RIS server for a boot disk or pxe card to pick up an IP address in this manner.

from memory you have to set up and authorise a RIS server for a boot disk or pxe card to pick up an IP address in this manner.

Click to expand...

I don't think that is what he's trying to do Dales. The way I read it, he's got the XP Install files shared on the server, and he wants to install from that share across the network and he's using a net boot disk in order to access the share (presumably after using a net use command ).

To the OP :-

I think it's a combination of the boot disk and the NIC inside the PC. I have been using various versions of the Universal TCP/IP boot disk over the last few years and occationaly it doesn't correctly identfy the correct network chipset on the NIC. Even if it does I have had them sit there sometimes and hang on the obtain an IP address part of the boot process.

Sometimes waiting it out will work (can take several minutes). That has worked sometimes on Dell's I have had problems with. If that doesn't work, I'd try a different NIC inside the PC and give that a go.

CertForums.com is not sponsored by, endorsed by or affiliated with Cisco Systems, Inc. Cisco®, Cisco Systems®, CCDA™, CCNA™, CCDP™, CCNP™, CCIE™, CCSI™; the Cisco Systems logo and the CCIE logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. All other trademarks, including those of Microsoft, CompTIA, VMware, Juniper ISC(2), and CWNP are trademarks of their respective owners.